different between impeachment vs crimination
impeachment
English
Etymology
From Middle English empechement (“hindrance, impediment, obstacle, obstruction; legal accusation or charge; act of calling into question or discrediting; challenge to a claim or right”), and thence either:
- from Middle English empechen, empeschen, empesche, enpechen, impechen (“to cause to get stuck; of a ship: to run aground; to block, obstruct; to hinder, impede; to prevent; to interfere with, harm; to criticize, disparage; to bring charges against; to formally accuse of treason or another high crime”) (from Anglo-Norman empecher, Old French empechier, empeechier) + -ment (suffix forming action nouns, concrete nouns, and nouns indicating a result or a condition or state); or
- from Old French empechement, empeechement, empeschement (“obstacle”) (modern French empêchement (“impediment, obstacle”)), from empeechier (“to fetter; to hinder”), empescher (“to inhibit, prevent”) + -ment (suffix forming nouns from verbs).
The English word is analysable as impeach +? -ment.
Old French empechier, empeechier and empescher (compare modern French empêcher) are derived from Late Latin impedic?re (“to catch; to entangle”), present active infinitive of Latin impedic? (“to entangle; to fetter”), from im- (variant of in-) + pedica (“fetter, shackle; snare, trap”) (from p?s (“foot”), ultimately from Proto-Indo-European *ped- (“to step, walk; to fall, stumble”)) + -?.
In senses 1.2 (“accusation that a person has committed a crime”) and 1.3 (“act of impeaching or charging a public official with misconduct”), the word has been used in place of Latin impetere, the present active infinitive of impet? (“to assail, attack, rush upon”).
Pronunciation
- (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /?m?pi?t?m?nt/
- (General American) IPA(key): /im?pit?m?nt/
- Hyphenation: im?peach?ment
Noun
impeachment (countable and uncountable, plural impeachments)
- (countable) The act of calling into question or challenging the accuracy or propriety of something.
- Synonyms: deprecation, depreciation, discrediting, disparagement
- (countable, law) A demonstration in a court of law, or before another finder of fact, that a witness was ingenuine before, and is therefore less likely to tell the truth now.
- (countable, law, Britain) An accusation that a person has committed a crime against the state, such as treason.
- (countable, law, chiefly US) The act of impeaching or charging a public official with misconduct, especially if serious, often with the aim of having the official dismissed from office.
- (uncountable) The state of being impeached.
- (uncountable, archaic) Hindrance; impediment; obstruction.
Alternative forms
- empeachment (obsolete)
Related terms
Descendants
- ? Polish: impeachment
- ? Russian: ?????????? (impí?ment)
- ? Kazakh: ????????? (ïmpïçment)
- ? Spanish: impeachment
Translations
References
Further reading
- impeachment on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
French
Etymology
From English impeachment, originally to refer to the United States; doublet of French empêchement.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /im.pit?.m?nt/
Noun
impeachment m (plural impeachments)
- (law) impeachment (act of impeaching or charging a public official with misconduct, in the United States and other countries)
Italian
Etymology
Borrowed from English impeachment.
Noun
impeachment m (invariable)
- (law) impeachment (act of impeaching a public official)
- Synonym: messa in stato di accusa
Polish
Etymology
From English impeachment, from Middle English empechement.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /im?p?it??.m?nt/
Noun
impeachment m inan
- (law) impeachment (act of impeaching or charging a public official with misconduct)
- (law) impeachment (state of being impeached)
Declension
Further reading
- impeachment in Wielki s?ownik j?zyka polskiego, Instytut J?zyka Polskiego PAN
- impeachment in Polish dictionaries at PWN
Spanish
Etymology
English impeachment
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /im?pit??ment/, [?m?pit??.m?n?t?]
Noun
impeachment m (plural impeachments)
- impeachment (political trial) (especially in reference to the political systems of English-speaking countries)
- Synonyms: destitución, impugnación
impeachment From the web:
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crimination
English
Etymology
Borrowed from Latin criminatio, criminationis.
Pronunciation
- (US) IPA(key): /?k??m??ne???n/
Noun
crimination (countable and uncountable, plural criminations)
- An accusation of wrongdoing, a recrimination
- 1837, William Hickling Prescott, History of the Reign of Ferdinand and Isabella
- […] and when the ambassadors, after a fruitless attempt at negotiation, which evaporated in mutual crimination and recrimination, set out on their return to Aragon, they were twice detained, […]
- 1837, William Hickling Prescott, History of the Reign of Ferdinand and Isabella
Related terms
- criminate
Translations
crimination From the web:
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